And a forecast from NOAA showing that the midwest and northeast can expect some rain and snow from the last gust of this thing today:

NOAA

Unlike the cyclones we're used to seeing develop over oceans, this cyclone formed over land.

It's what meteorologists call the "Witch of November" or simply the "November Witch," and it's not the first one to strike our country. Records of the November Witch causing problems date as far back as the 1860s.

Herbert Nicholl Jr.The November Witch is a consequence of cool, low-pressure air that's migrated down from Canada mixing with warm, high-pressure air that's come up from Mexico.

When the two mix, they can begin to rotate and if that rotation picks up enough speed, it forms a funnel. The result is a powerful cyclone with hurricane-force winds.

Most years, the witch goes unnoticed, but this year's crazy events were impossible to ignore. Millions have been affected either by snow-covered roads (like the on in Denver shown below), power outages, flight delays, flooding, vehicle damage, and more.

So far, the highest wind speeds reported this year were in Kansas City and over Michigan Lake that reached over 60 mph. More than 12,000 people in Kansas City lost power. And lakeshore flooding has led to the closing of streets like Route 5 in Hamburg, New York.

This year's November Witch is being compared to a similar one that struck in 1975 and conjured wind speeds so high that the resulting waves sunk the Great Lake freighter ship called the Edmund Fitzgerald.

The most severe November Witch in recorded history hit between Nov. 7-10 in 1913, that led to over a dozen ship wrecks and an estimated 250 deaths. It's estimated to have caused today's equivalent of $117 million in damage.